![]() And why is there nothing on the advances that put air travel in reach of the average American? Nevertheless, Halberstam keeps his narrative tightly focused by concentrating on the era's human instruments of change, including some famous (Eisenhower, Elvis, Brando, Kerouac, Milton Berle, et al.) and others more obscure (Kemmons Wilson and Dick and Mac McDonald, founders of, respectively, Holiday Inn and McDonald's). Halberstam also fails to explain fully America's role in reviving the postwar economies of Japan and Western Europe. While rightly lingering over McCarthyism and the development of the atomic bomb, he skims over Communism's advances in Eastern Europe and China in the late 40's, leaving an inadequate sense of why Americans yielded so readily to national-security hysteria during the period. ![]() Such a sprawling panorama can't be depicted coherently without selective use of material, and some of Halberstam's omissions are open to question. ![]() ![]() In The Best and the Brightest, The Powers That Be, and The Reckoning, Halberstam proved that he can master intimidating subjects with aplomb-and in this massive tome on a convulsive decade in American life, he meets with equal success. ![]()
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